Incredible story of how Titanic was REALLY found: Oceanographer says US Navy funded his search for 'unsinkable' liner because it provided perfect Cold War cover for his other task - to find two missing US nuclear subs before the Russians

Robert Ballard, a former naval intelligence officer and oceanographer, wanted to search for the Titanic in 1982

But he needed the Navy to provide badly needed funding for his mission

Navy agreed on one condition - that he also use the money to locate two submarines that disappeared in the 1960s

Ballard says the Titanic mission was announced so that the Soviet Union wouldn't suspect he was really searching for submarines

His team found the USS Thresher and the USS Scorpion before locating the Titanic on the same mission in 1985

In 1963, Thresher sank more than 200 miles off the coast of Boston, killing 129 people

In 1969, 99 crewmen died when the Scorpion mysteriously disappeared near the Azores

Explorer Robert Ballard (seen above in 2015) led the team which found the wreckage of the Titanic in the North Atlantic Ocean in 1985

The discovery of the Titanic was initially a mission designed to trick the Soviet Union into thinking that the U.S. military was searching for the doomed ocean liner while it was also looking for two missing nuclear submarines.

The Titanic, the luxury ocean liner which tragically sank to the bottom of the North Atlantic Ocean after colliding into an iceberg on April 15, 1912, was found on the ocean floor by a team led by Robert Ballard in 1985.

Three years before the discovery, Ballard was a naval intelligence officer and oceanographer who was developing his own remote-control underwater vehicle.

But he was running out of money and he needed funding, according to CBS News.

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‘So, it was a deal - you'll let me do what I want to do, if I do what you want to do,’ Ballard said.

The story sounds similar to the plot line from the 1990 film The Hunt for Red October, Ballard said, because the Navy didn’t want the Russians to know that he was looking for the downed nuclear submarines

It was later learned that Ballard used the Titanic mission as a cover story for a top secret assignment - to locate two missing nuclear submarines. One of them, the USS Thresher, is seen in the above file photo

In 1968, 99 crewmen died when their submarine, the USS Scorpion, mysteriously disappeared near the Azores, a Portuguese archipelago some 1,000 miles west of the European continent. The Scorpion is seen above in Portsmouth, England on May 10, 1960

Ballard said he needed the Titanic story as subterfuge.

‘It was very top secret,’ Ballard said.

‘And so I said, “Well, let's tell the world I am going after the Titanic”.’

Ballard managed to find the Thresher and the Scorpion, but it took him longer than expected.

So he only had 12 days left to search for the ruins of the Titanic.

‘I learned something from mapping the Scorpion that taught me how to find the Titanic: look for its trail of debris,’ Ballard said.

It took him eight days to locate the ship, whereas others searched for nearly two months and didn’t find it, Ballard said.

In the final four days before his mission was up, Ballard did underwater filming of the Titanic’s wreckage.

Of the estimated 2,400 who sailed on the Titanic when it left port at Southampton for New York City, more than 1,500 died. The remnants of the Titanic are seen above on the floor of the North Atlantic Ocean

He said that his team’s mood changed quickly as it got closer to the wreckage site.

‘We realized we were dancing on someone's grave, and we were embarrassed,’ Ballard said.

‘The mood, it was like someone took a wall switch and went click.

‘And we became sober, calm, respectful, and we made a promise to never take anything from that ship, and to treat it with great respect.

‘You don't go to Gettysburg with a shovel. You don't take belt buckles off the Arizona.’

Of the estimated 2,400 who sailed on the Titanic when it left port at Southampton for New York City, more than 1,500 died.

The ocean liner is the subject of a new exhibit, Titanic: The Untold Story, at National Geographic Museum in Washington, D.C.